Showing posts with label Tropical Fish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tropical Fish. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Picasso Triggerfish


Picasso Triggerfish
This Picasso triggerfish is also known as the Picasso TriggerfishLagoon or Blackbar triggerfish, or more generically, hu-mu hu-mu (referring to all triggerfishes). It is a colorful relative of puffers, porcupinefishes, boxfishes, and filefishes-- all members of the order Tetraodontiformes.



Triggerfish are found in tropical waters around the world, including the Mediterranean Sea and the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans. The Triggerfish Family Balistidae contains about 30 species, with at least nine of these to be known from the Hawaiian area.


Triggerfish are tough and sleek, favoring shallow waters of the reef. Their tough skin and fused teeth make them capable of successfully attacking spiny sea urchins to get to the soft flesh. They also eat crabs, mollusks, worms, other fish, algae and are even known to nip at the tips of hard corals. This species only grows to about nine to ten inches (about 25 cm) but some others, such as the Titan triggerfish, may grow to 30 inches (75 cm). They are found in many areas of the Pacific from Hawaii to the Maldives, and even the southeast and east central Atlantic and the Red Sea.


The Picasso Trigger is a magnificent and very popular aquarium species that is easily recognized by its creamy grayish-tan and white colored body splashed with many distinctive bright blue and yellow fine-line, and golden, black and white wide-band type markings.


Other pictures of triggerfish.

Picasso TriggerfishPicasso Triggerfish
Picasso TriggerfishPicasso Triggerfish

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Lionfish – A Venomous Marine Fish

Lionfich – A Venomous Marine Fish

The lionfish is native to the tropical Indo-Pacific Lionfich – A Venomous Marine Fishregion of the world, but various species can be found worldwide. Due to a recent introduction, the lionfish has recently been spotted in the warmer coral regions of the Eastern Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea. Lionfish are an invasive species in the Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean Sea regions. Successful breeding of the lionfish in captivity has not been looked upon.


The common lionfish generally reaches a size of 30-35cm. Smaller lionfish are typically the size of a tennis ball (not including fins). There are many types of lionfish that vary in size.


The venom of the lionfish, delivered via an array of up to 18 needle-like dorsal fins, is purely defensive. It relies on camouflage and lightning-fast reflexes to capture prey, mainly fish and shrimp. A sting from a lionfish is extremely painful to humans and can cause nausea and breathing difficulties, but is rarely fatal.


Lionfish, also called turkey fish, dragon fish and scorpion fish, are native to the reefs and rocky crevices of the Indo-Pacific, although they've found their way to warm ocean habitats worldwide.


Other picture of Lionfish.

Atlantic LionfishCommon Lionfish
Common LionfishRed Volitans Lionfish